What FQ in Texas actually requires.
When you must register in Texas
Triggers include: physical office, employees, regular sales presence, real estate, professional services, or persistent revenue from Texas customers. One-off sales typically do not require registration.
Application for Registration
Texas's name for the foreign qualification document. Filed with the SOS along with a current Certificate of Good Standing from your home state (typically dated within 30-90 days).
Registered Agent in Texas
Texas requires foreign-qualified entities to maintain a Texas-based RA. The address must be physical (not P.O. box) and accept service of process. RA is included in our FQ + Compliance bundle.
Texas Public Information Report obligation
Once registered, your foreign entity must file the Texas Public Information Report (due May 15) every cycle, same as a domestic entity. Miss it and you lose authority to do business in Texas.
Penalties for late registration
Texas can assess back-fees from the date business activity began, plus per-month penalties. Some courts dismiss lawsuits filed by unregistered foreign entities until the registration is cured.
Pre-filled from your BOS record
BOS already has your home-state entity name, formation date, EIN, officers, and addresses. We pre-fill the Application for Registration, attach the Certificate of Good Standing, and you approve before submission.
A clean handoff, in 6 steps.
Confirm registration is required
We walk through the triggers (employees, office, regular sales, real estate, professional services) so you only register when Texas actually requires it.
Obtain home-state Certificate of Good Standing
Texas requires a current Certificate of Good Standing from your formation state, typically dated within 30-90 days. We order it from your home-state SOS.
Designate Texas Registered Agent
You'll need a physical Texas address that accepts service of process. We provide one (included in FQ + Compliance bundle) or you can use your own.
Prepare the Application for Registration
Name (with availability check in Texas), home-state entity details, RA, officers/members, and effective date. We draft and review with you.
File with Texas SOS
Submitted electronically with $750 state fee and Certificate of Good Standing attachment. State-stamped registration returns to your BOS vault.
Year-one Texas compliance
Texas Public Information Report added to calendar (due May 15), tax registrations as applicable, deadline monitoring across both states.
File the registration, or handle year-one compliance too.
Foreign qualification creates ongoing obligations in the new state. Pick the level of coverage that fits.
- Application for Registration prepared and filed in Texas
- Home-state Certificate of Good Standing obtained and attached (required)
- State-stamped Application for Registration returned to your vault
- Registered Agent designation in new state (you provide, or add separately)
- Plain-English review before submission
- Everything in Standard FQ filing
- Registered Agent service in Texas · 1 year included
- Annual Report AutoFile in Texas · 1 year included
- Deadline monitoring across both your home state and Texas
- Home-state Certificate of Good Standing (no separate charge)
- Priority human support through the registration window
Common questions.
When do I need to foreign-qualify in Texas?
You register (foreign-qualify) in Texas when your out-of-state entity starts doing business there: an office, employees, a warehouse, or regular in-person sales in Texas usually trigger it, while a one-off sale or a passive investor typically does not. The exact line is set by Texas statute and case law. Registering late can mean back fees and penalties, so it is better to qualify before you build a real presence.
What is the Application for Registration in Texas?
It is the filing that puts your existing out-of-state LLC or corporation on Texas's record as a foreign entity so it can legally operate there. It names your entity, its home state, and its Texas registered agent, and usually attaches a recent home-state Certificate of Good Standing. It does not create a new company; it authorizes the one you already have to do business in Texas.
How much does foreign qualification cost in Texas?
The cost is the Texas state filing fee for the Application for Registration, which the state sets, plus our service, and often a small fee for the home-state Certificate of Good Standing you attach. Current amounts are on the pricing page. Remember it is a layer on top of your home-state costs, which is exactly why forming out-of-state to save money usually backfires.
Do I need a Registered Agent in Texas?
Yes. Every state where you register, Texas included, requires a registered agent with a physical in-state address to receive legal mail. If you do not have a presence in Texas, a commercial agent is the practical answer, and it keeps you from missing a lawsuit or a state notice. We can serve as your Texas agent as part of the registration.
How long does Texas take to approve the registration?
It depends on Texas's queue and whether you expedite. Some states clear it in a few days online, others take one to three weeks by standard processing. A common delay is the home-state Certificate of Good Standing, which has to be recent, so we order it in parallel. We file the moment everything is in hand and give you Texas's realistic window up front.
What happens if I do business in Texas without registering?
It is a costly gamble. Texas can impose back fees and penalties for the time you operated unregistered, and, more damaging, an unregistered entity often cannot bring or defend a lawsuit in Texas courts until it qualifies and pays up. That means a customer or partner could take advantage while you are locked out of the courthouse. Registering on time avoids all of it.
Does my Texas foreign-qualified entity have to file an annual report?
Yes, in most cases. Once you are registered in Texas, you generally owe the same ongoing filings a domestic entity does there, such as a periodic annual report and any franchise tax, on top of your home-state obligations. That is the real ongoing cost of operating in two states. A compliance calendar tracks both sets of deadlines so neither lapses.
Can I withdraw from Texas later?
Yes. If you stop doing business in Texas, you file a certificate of withdrawal to formally end your foreign registration and stop the recurring fees and reports. Skipping this is a common mistake: the state keeps billing and can penalize you for missed reports even after you have left. We handle the withdrawal so the exit is clean and the meter actually stops.
What if my entity name is taken in Texas?
If another business already uses your name in Texas, the state will not register you under it, but you are not stuck. Most states let a foreign entity register under an assumed or fictitious name, a DBA, for use in Texas, so you keep your real name at home and operate under an alternate there. We check name availability in Texas first and set up the assumed name if it is needed.
Where to next?
Every filing connects into your File.Business operating system. Pick where to go from here: we keep the rest tracked.